There were two roads cut into the surrounding forest, but she was too disoriented by the shortcut through the trees to know where the roads might lead.
"Here it comes," Pony warned.
She whirled to face the oncoming animal. It was twice as ma.s.sive as the constructs she had fought with Windwolf. Somehow the flattened face and mane were more recognizable as a lion"s, although the body still seemed built on a bulldog design with the same odd poof tail arched over its back. As big as a horse, the Foo dog-no, make that Foo lion-rushed toward them.
She yanked up her Uzi, flicked the safety off with her thumb, and braced herself against the reported kick. When she pulled the trigger, it seemed like she was suddenly holding a living thing, intent on getting out of her hands, spitting smoke and fire. The noise of each bullet firing blurred into a prolonged rolling thunder. If the d.a.m.n Foo lion hadn"t been nearly on top of her, she might have missed the beast completely. As it was, though, hitting a barn would have been as easy.
As the first bullet struck the lion, its appearance transformed to the deep violet spell form, a polygon rendering of a lion done in magic. The runes flared with each rapid hit, flashing like a strobe light, the small dog writhing inside the monster puppet. The spell form slowed the bullets until she could actually see them flying through the magic like a swarm of angry bees. The first bullets missed the important dog core, but they acted like tracers for her aim, even with the kicking gun. The construct was smashed backward, and at least three bullets struck home. Once dead, she expected the lion to revert back down to lap dog, but the ma.s.sive body remained, showing no sign of what killed it.
Three seconds. Her gun was empty, her ears were ringing, and the beast was dead.
Then the second Foo lion hit her from behind, bowling her over.
Its ma.s.sive jaws closed on her shoulder and she was jerked upward, off her feet. She screamed in surprise and fear. With her dangling in its mouth, the lion bounded back toward the oni compound. s.h.i.t, it was fetching fetching her like some rubber play toy! her like some rubber play toy!
"Pony!" she cried as she thrashed, trying to squirm free. The teeth didn"t seem to be piercing her skin, but it had a firm hold on her. She clawed at its face, but it didn"t seem to be feeling pain from her flailing at it. How was it seeing, she wondered, and clamped both hands over its eyes.
The Foo lion stumbled to a stop and shook her hard; its teeth sank into her shoulder, and she screamed in pain and sudden fear of being mauled.
The construct"s pause, though, had given Pony a chance to catch up. He slammed the oni sword deep into the lion"s side. The length of steel shifted the lion into spell form and revealed the dog within. The blade struck not where the real heart of a lion would lie, but farther back, to unerringly pierce the dog. The lion roared with pain, dropping her, and then collapsed.
"Domi, are you hurt?" Pony crouched beside her as she crabbed backward away from the unmoving lion.
"No." With him between her and the beast, she felt safe enough to stop crawling and actually consider if she was hurt. "At least not badly, but I"m getting tired of hearing that question."
"Forgiveness," Pony murmured, and lifted up her shirt to examine the puncture wounds.
"Pony!" she whined.
"Sometimes one is wounded more than one knows." Pony eyed the puncture wounds, then glanced about, as if looking for a light source. "I can not tell how deep they are. We need to stop the bleeding. Come, there will be supplies in one of the tents."
"I"m fine." She stood by herself to prove it. "I just want to get someplace safe. And I want my gun." She swayed as she looked down, trying to see the matte black Uzi on the ground, but the dark was making it impossible to see.
"I"ll look, you just walk to the tents."
So she teetered off ahead of him as he went slowly, searching the ground that the Foo lion had covered while carrying her. It was a surprising amount. If she"d been feeling up to a faster pace, she would have told him to forget the gun. As she reached the tents, delayed reaction was setting in and she came to a complete, trembling halt. Why couldn"t she get her breath? Was her lung collapsing? Oh, no, that"s right, she"d just run like three miles.
Oh G.o.ds, oh G.o.ds. She desperately wanted Windwolf, a hot shower, and a comfy bed with him in it.
"Here it is, domi domi." Pony handed her the Uzi, considered her, took it back, searched her pockets for a fresh clip, reloaded the gun, put the safety back on, and slung its strap over her head, settling it on her back. "I"ll find a first-aid kit. Sit down."
She sat on a pile of ma.s.sive foundation stones between two tents, panting and shaking, as he went off. Now that she was still, she could feel the feedback again. It seemed stronger Okay, get a grip. Two roads. Which one should we take?
When built, the palace was going to have a great view of Pittsburgh. From where she sat, she could see out over the top of the surrounding elfin forest to the barren cut of the Rim and the bright human city beyond it. Both roads, however, led downhill into dark unknown. The left road would be the more direct way-but in Pittsburgh, that usually meant a need for a bridge. She doubted that three weeks had been enough time for something as ambitious as a bridge to be built-but hey, she built a gate that folded dimensions during that period. Still, if said bridge was unfinished, they"d lose valuable time backtracking.
On the left-most road, a shadow moved against the blackness, perceivable only as motion. Tinker froze in sudden fear that it was another Foo lion, and then realized it was humanoid. Friend or foe? Human, elf, or oni? Tinker got the impression of tall, slender, and graceful, realized it was an elf, and had started forward to greet the elf when she suddenly recognized the female. By then it was too late. Suddenly the tents and stones became sides of a trap.
Sparrow was in black leather pants and a black shirt, only her white skin and long pale braid glinting in the moonlight. The elf pointed a pistol at Tinker, the barrel hole seeming ma.s.sive. "They must be complete twits not to be able to keep track of one little girl. Where is Stormhorse?"
"The oni sent Foo lions after me." Tinker indicated the nearest dead lion and the dark forest beyond. She could feel the Uzi heavy on her back. Could she get it swung forward and the safety off before Sparrow shot her? She let all the weariness and heartache of the last three weeks bleed into her voice. "He told me to run..."
"How convenient. Tomtom wants you back. Make no mistake, you"re too dangerous for me to let wander back to Windwolf. One false move, and I will kill you."
"You"ve already lost, Sparrow. I"m the pivot. I"ve made my choice. There"s nothing anyone can do about it."
"You"re still thinking like a human," Sparrow tsked. "I"ve got the rest of time to figure out another way of doing this. The beauty of all this is that I only lose if you live to tell Windwolf what I"ve done."
Guessing what was coming next, Tinker threw herself sideways, but still Sparrow"s bullet smashed into her side, knocking her off her feet in a violent half turn. Pony was suddenly there, catching Tinker before she fell against the stone. He shouted something and Tinker felt magic surge up, rushing like hot floodwaters. The blueness of his magical shields flared around them.
Sparrow"s gun thundered again and again, the muzzle spitting flame and smoke.
Tinker felt the bullets strike Pony"s shields-expending energy into the system with a hard kick that transmitted through the spell and Pony"s body to her-and then ricochet harmlessly away.
When Sparrow hit the end of her clip, Pony drew his oni sword-the steel blade disrupting his shields-and thrust the sword deep into Sparrow"s chest. "Die, you traitorous b.i.t.c.h," he growled and shoved it on through her.
Sparrow had cried out when the sword first penetrated her. She looked surprised at the blade buried in her own body, and then concerned as she tried to gasp for breath that wouldn"t come. Sparrow slumped backwards against the tent wall even as Pony yanked the sword back out of her chest, her eyes going unfocused. The canvas cradled Sparrow gently, bowing under her falling weight so she slid elegantly downward, leaving a smear of blood on the white canvas.
Tinker stared at the dead elf. She thought she"d be happy to see Sparrow dead, but she could feel no joy in the killing. Maybe she hadn"t hated the female as much as she thought.
"Tinker domi domi! Where did she hit you?"
"In the side." Tinker realized she was holding her side. She lifted up her hand and found it covered with blood. "Oh s.h.i.t."
Pony sat her back on the stones, activated a light sphere, and examined the wound. "It is not bad. The bullet merely grazed you. I feared the worst; I thought she had killed you."
"I"m still alive and kicking."
"We must stop the bleeding. Then we must get out of here." He took his hands away as if he expected her to topple without his support. When he saw she could actually sit by herself, he went to fetch the abandoned first-aid kit.
"Sparrow came up the left road," Tinker told him when he"d returned. "She probably left the Rolls somewhere close by."
Pony sprayed the wound with a cool antibiotic and then pressed three large artificial skin patches into place. "You need a healing spell."
The kit was human-made, so there would be no spells in it. She was surprised he knew how to use the skin patches, but she supposed that knowing all sorts of first aid would be handy in a bodyguard.
"That looks good," Tinker lied. "Let"s go."
Pony raided Sparrow"s body for weapons, coming away with a pistol, two clips, a light bow, a quiver of white fletched spell arrows, and a sword and dagger of ironwood, which would allow him to keep his shields up. He left the oni sword where it lay, covered with Sparrow"s blood.
Tinker felt light-headed and odd as Pony guided her to the road, saying, "We need to get to the enclaves or the hospice."
The road cut a narrow path through the forest, only twelve feet or so wide. It went straight down to a gorge; wooden scaffolding provided a temporary footbridge across while stone b.u.t.tresses indicated that the future bridge would be built on an impressive scale. On the other side of the bridge were the enclaves and human civilization gleaming just beyond.
Pony, however, pulled her to a halt, and drew his sword. The shadows moved all around them, and oni warriors merged out of the darkness.
"Oh, f.u.c.k," Tinker whispered.
Magic surged in around them as Pony activated his shields, a scant comfort in the face of so many guns pointed their way. How much could the spell stop? Five bullets? Ten?
"I have played lightly with you." Tomtom"s voice came out of the night, and he shifted into view directly in front of them, flanked by two of his largest warriors. Gone were the kimono and any pretense of being anything but a large dangerous animal. Spell tattoos covered his skin, starting at his collarbone and flowing downward over muscled thighs and calves. He wore only a loincloth of black silk hung on a diagonal cut from right hip to left shin and a sword belt. Like Chiyo, he had a tail to match the inhuman ears; it flickered behind him in agitation. "My claws are out." He lifted his left hand to show that indeed his claws were extended, showing off three inches of needle-sharp points. "One false step, and I"ll content myself with whatever the tengu can do to salvage your work. This is not your battle, female-you are truly human under that skin. You owe them no alliance. My people are crowded and starving while the elves greedily h.o.a.rd this vast wilderness. We only want what they do not use."
"I"m not going back with you. I"m not going to betray them."
"Submit now, and I will show mercy."
"I"ve seen your mercy with Chiyo." She was surprised that he was even bothering to talk to her. By oni mentality, she needed to be punished, something she was highly resistant to submitting to. There was no way she"d agree-so why wasn"t he just ordering an attack? She glanced to the right at Pony, sword ready, his shields gleaming softly blue like an aura around him.
Of course. Pony"s shields sucked down large amounts of ambient magic. On a ley line, he could maintain them indefinitely. Where they stood now, though, it was only a matter of time before the shields drained the area and failed. Tomtom was stalling.
"I gave the kitsune a choice of punishments," Tomtom was saying. "Drop your weapons, surrender yourself, and I will go lightly on you too."
Screw this. Tinker leveled her Uzi, flicked off the safety, and emptied the machine gun at Tomtom. Even as she pulled the trigger, though, the oni lord flicked up his left palm, growling out a spell, and the tattoos along his left arm flared and a haze appeared between them. The bullets spat out of the muzzle of the machine gun, struck the magic barrier, making it flare and, weirdly enough, gleam brighter. She actually felt it sparking up levels with each bullet hit. The bullets didn"t pa.s.s through, nor ricochet, but instead dropped to the ground, inert. d.a.m.n, somehow the oni shield translated the kinetic energy of bullet back into the spell, fueling it. Tinker leveled her Uzi, flicked off the safety, and emptied the machine gun at Tomtom. Even as she pulled the trigger, though, the oni lord flicked up his left palm, growling out a spell, and the tattoos along his left arm flared and a haze appeared between them. The bullets spat out of the muzzle of the machine gun, struck the magic barrier, making it flare and, weirdly enough, gleam brighter. She actually felt it sparking up levels with each bullet hit. The bullets didn"t pa.s.s through, nor ricochet, but instead dropped to the ground, inert. d.a.m.n, somehow the oni shield translated the kinetic energy of bullet back into the spell, fueling it.
Too late she thought to spray the warriors to either side of Tomtom; she"d already run through the clip and now worked the trigger to be rewarded only with a series of clicks.
Tomtom pointed at Pony and uttered a word, and then indicated Tinker, and gave a longer command. Tinker didn"t need to know Oni to know what he"d said. Kill him, take her alive. Kill him, take her alive.
"No!" she shouted as the oni warriors surged forward, some with swords and others with hands outreached.
She tried to reload the Uzi only to have clip and gun wrenched from her hands, and then her arms held and she was lifted off the ground. She screamed wordlessly this time, kicking at the oni holding her, and her legs were caught. Hoisted upwards by the four oni, she saw Pony, shields blazing blue, desperately fending off eight oni warriors with sword and knife.
He was never going to be able to hold them off. They were going to kill him.
"No! No!" she cried, trying to wriggle free of the warriors" hold, but it was like being held by steel bands.
With a deep roaring sound-like an oncoming train-the wind suddenly blasted across the bridge and up the road, pouring over them, strangely hot. Her skin seemed to crawl as all her hair stood on end. She recognized the ma.s.sive influx of active magic, but there was more-something like static electricity-that rode piggyback upon the magic. Judging by the startled outcries around her, the oni felt it too.
"To me! To me!" Pony shouted and went down to his knees, crossing sword and dagger over his head.
"Pony!" she screamed as he dropped his guard.
With blinding whiteness, lightning struck.
She"d never been this close to lightning before. It split the air with a deafening crack, and the boom of thunder was instantaneous in a wave of heat and pressure that vibrated clear through her bones. It was there, and then not there, but its brilliance remained burned into her sight. The bolt had splintered, forking all around Pony, striking the eight oni attacking him. The warriors flew backward to land dead-blackened and smoking from the lightning.
It seemed an impossible miracle, and then she realized the truth.
Windwolf had arrived, summoning the magic of the Wind Clan spell stones to call down lightning.
Pony came off the ground now, blades flashing, and launched himself at the oni holding Tinker. Tinker struggled harder to get free, cursing at her captors. Tomtom shouted in Oni, pointing toward the bridge, correctly identifying which of the three elves was the most dangerous. Another lightning bolt hit close at hand, striking into a knot of oni warriors attempting to attack Pony from the rear.
Two of the oni holding her decided to face Pony rather than die keeping her captive-and a hard kick into the face of the third left her dangling in one warrior"s hold. There was a knife in his belt; she yanked it free and stabbed him in the stomach with it. The blade slid in to the hilt with stunning ease, and blood poured hot over her hand. The oni howled and punched her in the face.
Darkness washed in, and when it retreated Pony had her over his shoulder and was running for the bridge.
Had they won?
The crack of rifles and whine of bullets verified that no, they hadn"t.
Lightning struck-and as it flashed all vision to white-Pony stumbled and fell. It seemed as if he"d tripped over something. He started to fall to the left, which would have smashed Tinker under him. He dropped his sword, tucked her close, and rolled in mid-air to hit his right shoulder first. They tumbled through the mud of the road, Pony taking the brunt of the damage, as he protected her with his own body. They stopped when Pony slammed against the stone abutment at the end of the bridge.
As Pony lay unmoving, Tinker glanced back toward the pursuing oni.
She had one glimpse of Tomtom standing approximately where Pony had stumbled, a vicious grin on his face, before the oni lord stepped back into the shadows, completely vanishing from sight. She flashed to his first appearance on the road, he and his guard suddenly appearing as if teleporting. How was he doing it? Was he actually teleporting? Was he going invisible? Or like Chiyo, was he projecting what he wanted them to see into their minds?
Maybe the reason Chiyo had been so sure she could become a n.o.ble was because Tomtom had the same talents.
"Tinker?"
Windwolf still had his great sword sheathed, and he moved down the bridge in a stylistic stalk, like dancing in slow motion. She could feel the power he had gathered around him, the wind thrumming in his hold. He wore black leather pants, and a white silk shirt that blazed in the moonlight like a target. His long black hair was unbound, and it flowed out on the wind.
Of the sekasha sekasha, there was no sign. He was all alone.
"Is Pony alive?" His voice was quiet but loud, like a whisper over a microphone.
Pony was breathing, so Tinker said, "He"s unconscious."
"Get him up," Windwolf commanded. "Get him to the other end of the bridge. The others are coming."
Tinker glanced down at the still unmoving Pony, a foot taller and easily fifty pounds heavier than her. How the h.e.l.l did she move him? And where was Tomtom? What could the oni lord do-especially if he could throw illusions into Windwolf"s mind?
Pony had dropped his sword, but he had other weapons on him. The guns were useless; the bullets would only feed energy into Tomtom"s shield-a.s.suming that wasn"t an illusion. The knives placed her too near the much larger and better-trained oni. That left Sparrow"s light bow and spell arrows. The arrows were all fletched white, which meant the same spell was marked onto the shaft and activated by the sound of the arrows" flight.
As Tomtom surely planned, Windwolf moved to the end of the bridge to cover her and Pony. He spoke a word, shifting his right hand with fingers c.o.c.ked in stiff positions, and his shield extended out to cover the full end of the bridge.
"Go! Leave Pony if you have to." Windwolf commanded as the oni opened fire from the cover of the trees. The bullets deflected off his shield, but Tomtom could walk through it.
She didn"t spend the last three weeks protecting Pony to leave him now, not even to save Windwolf. Tinker nocked an arrow-and looked for the factors of 73931. She could keep Chiyo from reading her mind by doing math, but that hadn"t kept Chiyo from deluding her. She"d foiled Chiyo by noticing something that the kitsune had forgotten to disguise. Surely if Tomtom had two people to affect, there would be something he"d overlook, but what? The darkness itself would erase most of his errors. She lifted the bow, drew back the arrow, and tried to find a target.
"Tinker, what are you doing?" Windwolf growled.
"Trust me."
I can outthink him. I know I can.
Tomtom could fool her eyes. The gunfire covered his footsteps. What would he miss? His shadow? His smell?
Then it came to her-Tomtom would never think of hiding magic from a domana domana, since he couldn"t feel magic himself-and she focused on the active magic in the area. There, pa.s.sing through Windwolf"s shields and nearly on him, was Tomtom"s own shield spell.
She guessed the location of Tomtom"s heart and loosed the arrow. As the arrow leapt from her bow, its whistling pa.s.sage through the wind activated the spell written down its shaft; the kinetic energy of its physical form was trans.m.u.ted into coherent light-a bolt of pure energy. There was a faint ripple as it pa.s.sed through Tomtom"s shield spell-apparently designed only for solid projectiles. Then it lanced its way through the oni lord, and he appeared with a gurgling scream. He was only six feet from Windwolf, sword upraised and ready to strike-with a neat hole burned through the right side of his chest.
Windwolf shouted, lifted his arm straight out, fingers splayed. The wind slammed Tomtom backwards thirty feet. Windwolf growled a spell to summon another bolt of lightning, moving his hands in interweaving circles, his fingers flicking through complex patterns. The brilliance struck Tomtom as the oni lord started to rise.
He didn"t get up again.
There was a sweep of headlights on the far side of the bridge, and the sekasha sekasha spilled out of two of the Rolls and charged across the bridge. spilled out of two of the Rolls and charged across the bridge.
Windwolf flinging lightning bolts, the arrival of the sekasha, sekasha, and their own lord dead made the oni flee into the forest. The and their own lord dead made the oni flee into the forest. The sekasha sekasha met no resistance as they pa.s.sed beyond Windwolf"s protection. Only when the met no resistance as they pa.s.sed beyond Windwolf"s protection. Only when the sekasha sekasha had set up a line of defense did Windwolf loose his hold on the magic, letting it drain away. had set up a line of defense did Windwolf loose his hold on the magic, letting it drain away.